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Publisher:
Knopf

224 pages

Amazon.com Review

<strong>Amazon Best Books of the Month, February 2013:</strong> Anyone who gives a hoot about the status and the future of storytelling needs this rangy, brainy, bad-ass book--a book that celebrates books, dissects books, and pays homage to the creators of our stories. Packed with riffs and rants--some hilarious, some brilliant, some flat-out zany--this is caffeinated, mad-genius stuff: sly, manic, thoughtful, and witty. (Shields' three-page self-comparison to George W. Bush--"he likes to watch football and eat pretzels"--is especially fun.) At times, I felt like I was on a madcap tour of an eccentric professor's private basement library, never knowing what was around the next corner. My review copy is littered with underlines and exclamation points and, yes, a handful of WTFs. Part critical analysis, part essay, and part memoir, <i>How Literature Saved My Life</i> offers its liveliest passages when Shields reveals Shields. A stutterer, he developed an early kinship with the written word, since the spoken word came to him with "dehumanizing" difficulty. Which makes one of his final lines all the more potent: "Language is all we have to connect us, and it doesn't, not quite." --<i>Neal Thompson</i>

Publisher:
Knopf

224 pages

Amazon.com Review

<div class="aplus"> <h4>Amazon Guest Review of “How Literature Saved My Life,” by David Shields<p></p><p>By Cheryl Strayed</p></h4> <div class="rightImage" style="width: 287px;"><img src="http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/rando/ems/images/author/strayed/Strayed.gif" alt="Cheryl Strayed" /></div> <p><strong>Cheryl Strayed is the author of the best-selling memoir <i>Wild</i>. Strayed writes the “Dear Sugar” column on TheRumpus.net. Her writing has appeared in the <i>New York Times Magazine</i>, the <i>Washington Post Magazine</i>, <i>Vogue</i>, <i>Allure</i>, <i>Self</i>, the <i>Missouri Review</i>, <i>Brain</i>, <i>Child</i>, <i>The Rumpus</i>, the <i>Sun</i> and elsewhere. The winner of a Pushcart Prize as well as fellowships to the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference and the Sewanee Writers’ Conference, her essays and stories have been published in <i>The Best American Essays</i>, <i>The Best New American Voices</i>, and other anthologies.</strong></p> <p>Great books are born of grand passions. The best literature is made when authors refuse to rest easy, but instead dig into their obsessions in order to express not just what’s true, but what’s truer still. This greatness is apparent on every page of David Shields’s <i>How Literature Saved My Life</i>, a culturally searching declaration of the power and limitations of literature that’s also a highly idiosyncratic, deeply personal soul search by one super smart man who consumes and considers books as if his life depends on it.</p> <p>Part memoir, part manifesto, <i>How Literature Saved My Life</i> is as wide-ranging as it is intimate, and much of its power lies in the ambitiousness of Shields’s reach. It’s a book that defies definition. My category for it is simply <i>a strange book that I love</i>. It’s a serenade wrapped inside a cross-examination; an intellectual book that reads like a detective novel. In its pages, one reads about subjects as diverse as Tiger Woods, the theory that someday tiny robots will roam inside our bodies to reverse the damage caused by aging, Renata Adler’s Speedboat, and the private journals of Shields’s unsuspecting college girlfriend.</p> <p>This is a long way of saying that <i>How Literature Saved My Life</i> is a book with balls. It doesn’t ask for permission to be what it is: an original, opinionated, gentle-hearted, astonishingly intelligent collage of the ideas, reflections, memories, and experiences of a writer so avidly determined to understand what literature means that the reader must know too.</p> </div>

Publisher:
Knopf

224 pages

Product Description

<b>In this wonderfully intelligent, stunningly honest, and painfully funny book, acclaimed writer David Shields uses himself as a representative for all readers and writers who seek to find salvation in literature.</b><br><br>Blending confessional criticism and anthropological autobiography, Shields explores the power of literature (from Blaise Pascal's Pensées to Maggie Nelson's Bluets, Renata Adler's Speedboat to Proust's A Remembrance of Things Past) to make life survivable, maybe even endurable. Shields evokes his deeply divided personality (his "ridiculous" ambivalence), his character flaws, his woes, his serious despairs. Books are his life, but when they come to feel unlifelike and archaic, he revels in a new kind of art that is based heavily on quotation and consciousness and self-consciousness--perfect, since so much of what ails him is acute self-consciousness. And he shares with us a final irony: he wants "literature to assuage human loneliness, but nothing can assuage human loneliness. Literature doesn't lie about this--which is what makes it essential."<br><br>A captivating, thought-provoking, utterly original way of thinking about the essential acts of reading and writing.